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Impact & Storytellers

How Cinema Challenges our Perspective on Race: Lee Mun Wah

Lee Mun Wah is an internationally renowned Chinese American documentary filmmaker, author, poet, Asian folkteller, educator, community therapist and master diversity trainer. For more than 25 years he was a resource specialist and counselor in the San Francisco Unified School District.

Welcome to the Cinema of Change podcast with Robert Rippberger and Tobias Deml.

Lee Mun Wah is an internationally renowned Chinese American documentary filmmaker, author, poet, Asian folkteller, educator, community therapist and master diversity trainer. For more than 25 years he was a resource specialist and counselor in the San Francisco Unified School District. He has produced several documentaries discussing the impact of race relations in America. His list of works includes Last Chance for Eden which isa three part documentary about racism and sexismas well as his most famous film The Color of Fear. Lee Mun Wah is now the Executive Director of Stirfry Seminars & Consulting, a diversity training company that provides educational tools and workshops on issues pertaining to cross-cultural communication and awareness, mindful facilitation, and conflict mediation techniques.

  • 00:28 – Intro: Cinema and Race
  • 01:27 – Why did you use a film for communicating race relations?
  • 05:20 – Experiencing other racial viewpoints through film
  • 09:45 – Can identifying with a character’s journey change our own world?
  • 14:07 – How white privilege can become accessible through a film
  • 20:11 – Using films as educational tools
  • 25:54 – The community benefit of documentaries
  • 28:37 – How were people and institutions changed by your films?
  • 33:58 – Can fictional films be as impactful as documentaries?
  • 35:54 – Films can model our behavior
  • 37:03 – Advice for other impact-oriented filmmakers
  • 40:24 – Outro: The camera as a tool to reach deeper truths in a subject
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Media has always played an important role around the globe. We live in a world of influence and social change - and as filmmakers, we want to contribute to a better world. The question is: How can we make better films that accelerate progress and help people become stronger critical thinkers? How can we expose issues that are important, and publish content that challenges popular conceptions? These podcasts along with the SIE Voices magazine take a multidisciplinary approach and interviews filmmakers, psychologists, researchers and academics. It analyzes success stories of films that had an impact, and portrays companies that are following this path. SIE Voices is a platform to bring impact filmmakers together to share ideas and to challenge our assumptions through debate.

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